
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Have a look at this. This is Bach beginning a canon in inversion. The follower is a 6th below the leader:
(If you can’t see that the shapes are inversions, hold up a mirror — seriously!) Yet here, only a few bars later, the imitation seems to be at a different interval:
The follower is no longer a sixth below, but a third. How rare! And going on, something else:
(We’re looking at the lower two voices in this picture, the quarter notes.) We see the canonic imitation has shifted yet again, to the interval of a second. What is happening? Dare I say… W.T.F. Bach?
This type of composition is, I believe, completely unique. I’d love to see another example elsewhere in music. Bach writes the chorale melody four times, and in all four appearances, finds a different interval at which inverted imitation works.
The man’s capacity to combine a single shape with itself, to abstract the DNA of the smallest musical cell, to spin it, lengthen it, shrink it, to construct a world from a grain of sand; this is late Bach.
We Rely On Listener Support! How to Donate to this Podcast:
The best way to support this podcast, is to become a paid subscriber at wtfbach.substack.com
Enough paid subscribers = exclusive content, monthly merchandise giveaways!
You can also make a one-time donation here:
https://www.paypal.me/wtfbach
https://venmo.com/wtfbach
https://cash.app/$wtfbach
Thank you for listening! Thank you for your support.
Reach us at Bach (at) WTFBach (dot com)
By Evan Shinners4.9
5555 ratings
Have a look at this. This is Bach beginning a canon in inversion. The follower is a 6th below the leader:
(If you can’t see that the shapes are inversions, hold up a mirror — seriously!) Yet here, only a few bars later, the imitation seems to be at a different interval:
The follower is no longer a sixth below, but a third. How rare! And going on, something else:
(We’re looking at the lower two voices in this picture, the quarter notes.) We see the canonic imitation has shifted yet again, to the interval of a second. What is happening? Dare I say… W.T.F. Bach?
This type of composition is, I believe, completely unique. I’d love to see another example elsewhere in music. Bach writes the chorale melody four times, and in all four appearances, finds a different interval at which inverted imitation works.
The man’s capacity to combine a single shape with itself, to abstract the DNA of the smallest musical cell, to spin it, lengthen it, shrink it, to construct a world from a grain of sand; this is late Bach.
We Rely On Listener Support! How to Donate to this Podcast:
The best way to support this podcast, is to become a paid subscriber at wtfbach.substack.com
Enough paid subscribers = exclusive content, monthly merchandise giveaways!
You can also make a one-time donation here:
https://www.paypal.me/wtfbach
https://venmo.com/wtfbach
https://cash.app/$wtfbach
Thank you for listening! Thank you for your support.
Reach us at Bach (at) WTFBach (dot com)

6,830 Listeners

299 Listeners

10,726 Listeners

2,194 Listeners

7,699 Listeners

16 Listeners

4,198 Listeners

12,558 Listeners

5,535 Listeners

954 Listeners

16,223 Listeners

2,311 Listeners

3,519 Listeners

9,372 Listeners

996 Listeners